He reached the rank of Brigadier in the Irish Army.[1] He seems have been the "Colonel Ramsey" that went north with Major-General Jean Camus, Marquis de Pusignan, after the arrival of James II at Dublin.[2] During the Siege of Derry he took part in a Jacobite attempt to seize Windmill Hill,[3] and was killed there.[4][5] His loss was a major blow to the Jacobites as he was appreciated as one of the best officers in the army.[6] He was buried at Long Tower where the Catholic Long Tower Church is now.[7]
^D'Alton 1855, p. 950: "On the 14th of April following, when King James in his northern march came to Omagh, he found Pusignan's infantry there, left under the command of Colonel Ramsey;"
^Childs 2007, p. 99: "Before Derry, on the night of 5–6 May Brigadier Ramsay drove the guards out of a small earthwork built during Lundy's governorship and occupied Windmill Hill."
^Witherow 1879, p. 128: "Brigadier Ramsay, in an attempt to rally his men and bring them up again to renew the encounter, was slain."
^Doherty 1998, p. 64: "... and Brigadier Ramsey, a very competent officer, was killed."
^Hempton 1861, p. 282: "Brigadier Ramsay was interred at the Long Tower, and much lamented by all who know him, for he was reckoned the best soldier in the army next to Colonel Richard Hamilton."